Aesop quote about value from Aesop's Fables - What is most truly valuable is often underrated.
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What is most truly valuable is often underrated.
 Aesop, Aesop's Fables. copy citation

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Author Aesop
Source Aesop's Fables
Topic value underestimating
Date
Language English
Reference
Note Translated by George Fyler Townsend
Weblink http://www.gutenberg.org/files/21/21-h/21-h.htm

Context

“When too late, he thus reproached himself: «Woe is me! How I have deceived myself! These feet which would have saved me I despised, and I gloried in these antlers which have proved my destruction.»
What is most truly valuable is often underrated.
The Jackdaw and the Fox A HALF-FAMISHED JACKDAW seated himself on a fig-tree, which had produced some fruit entirely out of season, and waited in the hope that the figs would ripen. A Fox seeing him sitting so long and learning the reason of his doing so, said to him, «You are indeed, sir, sadly deceiving yourself; you are indulging a hope strong enough to cheat you, but which will never reward you with enjoyment.»” source

Meaning and analysis

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